"You
have chosen well, young sorcerer," Jabalwan said and placed a hand over
the boy's eyes. "Now you see the truth, the spirit world outside the
tribes. Now you see how the clouds with their backs to the earth carry our
spirits and return prophecy with the rains. From this day forth you will hunger
more for them than for food. You will fast and you will wound yourself to be
near them. All your suffering will be their long calling, all your needs their necessity.
The clouds are the weight of your life and the shapes of your destiny. Whenever
you rise to them, in prayer and in pain, they will carry you. For now, you are
a sorcerer."
Matu
looked at Jabalwan floating above him, his sinewy face dusted with
morninglight, and tried to grasp what the man said. His words sounded sweet,
and tense, and gone even as he spoke them, like threads of wind whistling
through a hollow bone.
"Is
this good?" the boy asked
"Good?"
Jabalwan smiled joylessly. "You are thinking like the Book again. For
sorcerers there is no good or evil." He looked up at the clouds floating
above them. "The sky is deep. It carries everything. No matter
where."
From Wyvern
2 Comments:
Ah, Wyvern! One of my favourite novels. What an adventure! I always recommend this novel at every opportunity.
Recommending my novel is the trophy all writers have coveted since papyrus! Thank you.
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